Chattanooga Times Free Press

83 years after his killing, a Black Georgia soldier gets Army funeral

- BY ALEXA MILLS

COLUMBUS, Ga. — In a Georgia cemetery, surrounded by tombstones cracked and worn by decades of rain and sun, Pvt. Albert King’s gleams new and bright. The Army unveiled it Sunday in a full military funeral, 83 years late.

Since 1941 his body has rested in an unmarked grave near the military base where a white military police officer shot and killed him.

Though King enlisted to fight in World War II, it was a fight with white bus drivers and soldiers on a segregated bus that cost him his life. After he escaped the bus and ran, the police officer found him, killed him and was exonerated in a sham military trial the same day.

An Army investigat­ion initially found that King had died in the line of duty. But, under pressure from the commanding general at the base, Fort Benning, investigat­ors reversed their decision and determined his death was a result of his own misconduct — making him ineligible for a military funeral. That was the official story, until three years ago.

In 2021, the facts of the case came to light in a legal brief and investigat­ive reporting. Three lawyers from the firm Morgan Lewis, all veterans and working pro bono, argued the Army Board for Correction of Military Records should reinstate the original decision that King died in the line of duty. In 2022, they won.

“His name was stained, and we needed to cleanse that stain,” said Rose Zoltek-Jick, a law professor at Northeaste­rn University and associate director of the Civil Rights and Restorativ­e Justice Project, which researches racially motivated Jim Crow-era homicides.

The memorial for King, eight decades in the making, is the Army’s latest effort to correct its record on race going back to the Civil War.

It has renamed nine

“Today, after 83 years, the arc has finally bent toward justice.”

— REP. SANFORD BISHOP, D-GA.

bases originally named for Confederat­e generals, including Fort Benning, now known as Fort Moore.

Last year, the Army overturned the conviction­s of 110 Black soldiers accused of rioting in Houston in 1917. Nineteen of them had been executed.

In 2021, it installed a memorial for Pvt. Felix Hall, who was lynched on Fort Benning about a month before King was killed.

An Army spokespers­on, Heather Hagan, said in a statement: “The Army puts a high priority on honoring the legacy of all our soldiers and their families, especially when there is an error or injustice, as there was in the case of Pvt. Albert King.”

Helen Russell, King’s cousin, has been his primary advocate. Though they never met — she was born a generation after his death — she feels connected to him by the chain of care that makes a family tree: She buried her father, and her father buried King’s brother, who had been the soldier’s only immediate family when he was killed.

It is unclear from the records who buried King.

Russell pursued the military memorial with the help of the Civil Rights and Restorativ­e Justice Project and her lawyers, Matthew Hawes, Micah Jones and Christophe­r Melendez. They had trouble gaining traction at first, but Russell’s member of Congress from Michigan, Shri Thanedar, helped get the Army’s attention.

“None of this would’ve been possible if not for the Board of Officers’ action back in ’41, which really documented what happened at the time,” Melendez said. “It was the witnesses who spoke before the board. It was Judge Hastie.”

William Hastie, a prominent Black judge and lawyer who worked in the top echelons of the War Department in the early 1940s, called King’s death the “callous and wanton shooting of an unarmed soldier” and argued the man had died in the line of duty. Hastie left the department soon after, fed up that his broadbased efforts to advocate for Black service members had been routinely ignored.

Top leaders from Fort Moore attended the ceremony Sunday, including Maj. Gen. Curtis Buzzard, the commanding general, and Col. Colin Mahle, garrison commander.

Rep. Sanford Bishop, D-Ga., who represents Fort Moore and identified himself as a descendant of slaves and a child of Jim Crow, spoke at King’s grave.

“Today, after 83 years, the arc has finally bent toward justice,” he said.

In an interview, he spoke of Dr. Thomas Brewer, a Black physician and a founder of the local NAACP chapter, who alerted Hastie to the King case — and who was later shot dead in a racial killing. “He was an unsung hero,” Bishop said through tears.

This was the defining theme of the memorial: that a succession of citizens, soldiers, family, advocates, lawyers and journalist­s had spoken up for King, starting in 1941, until his name was cleared.

When it came time to choose an inscriptio­n for the headstone, Russell said, the words came immediatel­y: “For my beloved cousin I fought the fight.”

The fight continues. At the memorial Sunday, she announced her intention to have King’s story incorporat­ed into the school curriculum where she lives in Michigan.

“The children will be taught what they need to know,” she said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Laurence Henderson, left, presents the flag that covered the coffin of Pvt. Albert King to King’s family Sunday at Porterdale Cemetery in Columbus, Ga.
PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER/THE NEW YORK TIMES U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Laurence Henderson, left, presents the flag that covered the coffin of Pvt. Albert King to King’s family Sunday at Porterdale Cemetery in Columbus, Ga.
 ?? ?? Hanjari Neavins, the daughter of U.S. Army Pvt. Albert King’s first cousin and King’s main advocate, lingers at his grave following Sunday’s funeral.
Hanjari Neavins, the daughter of U.S. Army Pvt. Albert King’s first cousin and King’s main advocate, lingers at his grave following Sunday’s funeral.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States